Contact information
LOCATION:
John Radcliffe Hospital, Level 6, Headley Way, Headington, Oxford, OX3 9DU
IDRM, Old Rd Campus, Roosevelt Dr, Headington, Oxford OX3 7TY
Collaborators
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Joanna Hester
Associate Professor
![]() | Professor of Biomedical Engineering |
Research groups
Megan Bradbury
MRes in molecular and cellular biology, BSc (Hons) Biochemistry, DPhil
Postdoctoral Research Assistant in Cancer Immunology for Stimulus-Responsive Immune-modulation
I am a Postdoctoral Research Assistant in Cancer Immunology for Stimulus-Responsive Immune-modulation with the Transplantation Research and Immunology Group (TRIG) at the Nuffield Department of Surgical Sciences and the Biomedical Ultrasonics, Biotherapy and Biopharmaceuticals Laboratory (BUBBL) at the Department of Engineering Science.
I completed my DPhil within TRIG under Associate Professor Joanna Hester. My research focused on the immunological changes with sarcoma ablation using HIFU. Understanding the immunological changes that occur with tumour ablation may allow for an immunotherapy to be developed to improve cancer treatment.
I obtained a honours degree from the University of Portsmouth in biochemistry, where my undergraduate research project focused on karyotyping tumours in cockle species as an Erasmus+ project at the Universidad de Vigo under the supervision of Dr Juan Pasantes. I then moved to the University of Birmingham to undertake an MRes in molecular and cellular biology with two separate projects, the first of which looking at the immunological changes with age and the similarities seen with immune-mediated inflammatory diseases with Dr Helen McGettrick. I completed a second project with Dr Warwick Dunn as a literature review on the metabolome of food and the use of precision nutrition to mediate disease progression. After completing my MRes I then moved to Oxford Nanopore Technologies where I worked as a scientist, in the pilot projects lab under Dr Jemma Jordan with a focus on SARS-CoV-2 along with other product development and technical writing.
Recent publications
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Spatial analysis of rhesus macaque lung tissue shows a key role for vaccination or previous SARS-CoV-2 challenge in immune pulmonary status
Conference paper
Gartlan C. et al, (2024), EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, 54, 1424 - 1424
